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+Project Gutenberg Etext of Father Damien by Robert L. Stevenson
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+Father Damien
+
+by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+June, 1995 [Etext #281]
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+Project Gutenberg Etext of Father Damien by Robert L. Stevenson
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+
+
+
+FATHER DAMIEN
+
+AN OPEN LETTER TO THE REVEREND DR. HYDE OF HONOLULU
+
+
+
+
+SYDNEY,
+FEBRUARY 25, 1890.
+
+Sir, - It may probably occur to you that we have met, and visited,
+and conversed; on my side, with interest. You may remember that
+you have done me several courtesies, for which I was prepared to be
+grateful. But there are duties which come before gratitude, and
+offences which justly divide friends, far more acquaintances. Your
+letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage is a document which, in my sight,
+if you had filled me with bread when I was starving, if you had sat
+up to nurse my father when he lay a-dying, would yet absolve me
+from the bonds of gratitude. You know enough, doubtless, of the
+process of canonisation to be aware that, a hundred years after the
+death of Damien, there will appear a man charged with the painful
+office of the DEVIL'S ADVOCATE. After that noble brother of mine,
+and of all frail clay, shall have lain a century at rest, one shall
+accuse, one defend him. The circumstance is unusual that the
+devil's advocate should be a volunteer, should be a member of a
+sect immediately rival, and should make haste to take upon himself
+his ugly office ere the bones are cold; unusual, and of a taste
+which I shall leave my readers free to qualify; unusual, and to me
+inspiring. If I have at all learned the trade of using words to
+convey truth and to arouse emotion, you have at last furnished me
+with a subject. For it is in the interest of all mankind, and the
+cause of public decency in every quarter of the world, not only
+that Damien should be righted, but that you and your letter should
+be displayed at length, in their true colours, to the public eye.
+
+To do this properly, I must begin by quoting you at large: I shall
+then proceed to criticise your utterance from several points of
+view, divine and human, in the course of which I shall attempt to
+draw again, and with more specification, the character of the dead
+saint whom it has pleased you to vilify: so much being done, I
+shall say farewell to you for ever.
+
+"HONOLULU,
+"August 2, 1889.
+
+"Rev. H. B. GAGE.
+
+"Dear Brother, - In answer to your inquires about Father Damien, I
+can only reply that we who knew the man are surprised at the
+extravagant newspaper laudations, as if he was a most saintly
+philanthropist. The simple truth is, he was a coarse, dirty man,
+headstrong and bigoted. He was not sent to Molokai, but went there
+without orders; did not stay at the leper settlement (before he
+became one himself), but circulated freely over the whole island
+(less than half the island is devoted to the lepers), and he came
+often to Honolulu. He had no hand in the reforms and improvements
+inaugurated, which were the work of our Board of Health, as
+occasion required and means were provided. He was not a pure man
+in his relations with women, and the leprosy of which he died
+should be attributed to his vices and carelessness. Other have
+done much for the lepers, our own ministers, the government
+physicians, and so forth, but never with the Catholic idea of
+meriting eternal life. - Yours, etc.,
+"C. M. HYDE" (1)
+
+(1) From the Sydney PRESBYTERIAN, October 26, 1889.
+
+To deal fitly with a letter so extraordinary, I must draw at the
+outset on my private knowledge of the signatory and his sect. It
+may offend others; scarcely you, who have been so busy to collect,
+so bold to publish, gossip on your rivals. And this is perhaps the
+moment when I may best explain to you the character of what you are
+to read: I conceive you as a man quite beyond and below the
+reticences of civility: with what measure you mete, with that shall
+it be measured you again; with you, at last, I rejoice to feel the
+button off the foil and to plunge home. And if in aught that I
+shall say I should offend others, your colleagues, whom I respect
+and remember with affection, I can but offer them my regret; I am
+not free, I am inspired by the consideration of interests far more
+large; and such pain as can be inflicted by anything from me must
+be indeed trifling when compared with the pain with which they read
+your letter. It is not the hangman, but the criminal, that brings
+dishonour on the house.
+
+You belong, sir, to a sect - I believe my sect, and that in which
+my ancestors laboured - which has enjoyed, and partly failed to
+utilise, and exceptional advantage in the islands of Hawaii. The
+first missionaries came; they found the land already self-purged of
+its old and bloody faith; they were embraced, almost on their
+arrival, with enthusiasm; what troubles they supported came far
+more from whites than from Hawaiins; and to these last they stood
+(in a rough figure) in the shoes of God. This is not the place to
+enter into the degree or causes of their failure, such as it is.
+One element alone is pertinent, and must here be plainly dealt
+with. In the course of their evangelical calling, they - or too
+many of them - grew rich. It may be news to you that the houses of
+missionaries are a cause of mocking on the streets of Honolulu. It
+will at least be news to you, that when I returned your civil
+visit, the driver of my cab commented on the size, the taste, and
+the comfort of your home. It would have been news certainly to
+myself, had any one told me that afternoon that I should live to
+drag such a matter into print. But you see, sir, how you degrade
+better men to your own level; and it is needful that those who are
+to judge betwixt you and me, betwixt Damien and the devil's
+advocate, should understated your letter to have been penned in a
+house which could raise, and that very justly, the envy and the
+comments of the passers-by. I think (to employ a phrase of yours
+which I admire) it "should be attributed" to you that you have
+never visited the scene of Damien's life and death. If you had,
+and had recalled it, and looked about your pleasant rooms, even
+your pen perhaps would have been stayed.
+
+Your sect (and remember, as far as any sect avows me, it is mine)
+has not done ill in a worldly sense in the Hawaiian Kingdom. When
+calamity befell their innocent parishioners, when leprosy descended
+and took root in the Eight Islands, a QUID PRO QUO was to be looked
+for. To that prosperous mission, and to you, as one of its
+adornments, God had sent at last an opportunity. I know I am
+touching here upon a nerve acutely sensitive. I know that others
+of your colleagues look back on the inertia of your Church, and the
+intrusive and decisive heroism of Damien, with something almost to
+be called remorse. I am sure it is so with yourself; I am
+persuaded your letter was inspired by a certain envy, not
+essentially ignoble, and the one human trait to be espied in that
+performance. You were thinking of the lost chance, the past day;
+of that which should have been conceived and was not; of the
+service due and not rendered. TIME WAS, said the voice in your
+ear, in your pleasant room, as you sat raging and writing; and if
+the words written were base beyond parallel, the rage, I am happy
+to repeat - it is the only compliment I shall pay you - the rage
+was almost virtuous. But, sir, when we have failed, and another
+has succeeded; when we have stood by, and another has stepped in;
+when we sit and grow bulky in our charming mansions, and a plain,
+uncouth peasant steps into the battle, under the eyes of God, and
+succours the afflicted, and consoles the dying, and is himself
+afflicted in his turn, and dies upon the field of honour - the
+battle cannot be retrieved as your unhappy irritation has
+suggested. It is a lost battle, and lost for ever. One thing
+remained to you in your defeat - some rags of common honour; and
+these you have made haste to cast away.
+
+Common honour; not the honour of having done anything right, but
+the honour of not having done aught conspicuously foul; the honour
+of the inert: that was what remained to you. We are not all
+expected to be Damiens; a man may conceive his duty more narrowly,
+he may love his comforts better; and none will cast a stone at him
+for that. But will a gentleman of your reverend profession allow
+me an example from the fields of gallantry? When two gentlemen
+compete for the favour of a lady, and the one succeeds and the
+other is rejected, and (as will sometimes happen) matter damaging
+to the successful rival's credit reaches the ear of the defeated,
+it is held by plain men of no pretensions that his mouth is, in the
+circumstance, almost necessarily closed. Your Church and Damien's
+were in Hawaii upon a rivalry to do well: to help, to edify, to set
+divine examples. You having (in one huge instance) failed, and
+Damien succeeded, I marvel it should not have occurred to you that
+you were doomed to silence; that when you had been outstripped in
+that high rivalry, and sat inglorious in the midst of your well-
+being, in your pleasant room - and Damien, crowned with glories and
+horrors, toiled and rotted in that pigsty of his under the cliffs
+of Kalawao - you, the elect who would not, were the last man on
+earth to collect and propagate gossip on the volunteer who would
+and did.
+
+I think I see you - for I try to see you in the flesh as I write
+these sentences - I think I see you leap at the word pigsty, a
+hyperbolical expression at the best. "He had no hand in the
+reforms," he was "a coarse, dirty man"; these were your own words;
+and you may think it possible that I am come to support you with
+fresh evidence. In a sense, it is even so. Damien has been too
+much depicted with a conventional halo and conventional features;
+so drawn by men who perhaps had not the eye to remark or the pen to
+express the individual; or who perhaps were only blinded and
+silenced by generous admiration, such as I partly envy for myself -
+such as you, if your soul were enlightened, would envy on your
+bended knees. It is the least defect of such a method of
+portraiture that it makes the path easy for the devil's advocate,
+and leaves the misuse of the slanderer a considerable field of
+truth. For the truth that is suppressed by friends is the readiest
+weapon of the enemy. The world, in your despite, may perhaps owe
+you something, if your letter be the means of substituting once for
+all a credible likeness for a wax abstraction. For, if that world
+at all remember you, on the day when Damien of Molokai shall be
+named a Saint, it will be in virtue of one work: your letter to the
+Reverend H. B. Gage.
+
+You may ask on what authority I speak. It was my inclement destiny
+to become acquainted, not with Damien, but with Dr. Hyde. When I
+visited the lazaretto, Damien was already in his resting grave.
+But such information as I have, I gathered on the spot in
+conversation with those who knew him well and long: some indeed who
+revered his memory; but others who had sparred and wrangled with
+him, who beheld him with no halo, who perhaps regarded him with
+small respect, and through whose unprepared and scarcely partial
+communications the plain, human features of the man shone on me
+convincingly. These gave me what knowledge I possess; and I learnt
+it in that scene where it could be most completely and sensitively
+understood - Kalawao, which you have never visited, about which you
+have never so much as endeavoured to inform yourself; for, brief as
+your letter is, you have found the means to stumble into that
+confession. "LESS THAN ONE-HALF of the island," you say, "is
+devoted to the lepers." Molokai - "MOLOKAI AHINA," the "grey,"
+lofty, and most desolate island - along all its northern side
+plunges a front of precipice into a sea of unusual profundity.
+This range of cliff is, from east to west, the true end and
+frontier of the island. Only in one spot there projects into the
+ocean a certain triangular and rugged down, grassy, stony, windy,
+and rising in the midst into a hill with a dead crater: the whole
+bearing to the cliff that overhangs it somewhat the same relation
+as a bracket to a wall. With this hint you will now be able to
+pick out the leper station on a map; you will be able to judge how
+much of Molokai is thus cut off between the surf and precipice,
+whether less than a half, or less than a quarter, or a fifth, or a
+tenth - or, say a twentieth; and the next time you burst into print
+you will be in a position to share with us the issue of your
+calculations.
+
+I imagine you to be one of those persons who talk with cheerfulness
+of that place which oxen and wain-ropes could not drag you to
+behold. You, who do not even know its situation on the map,
+probably denounce sensational descriptions, stretching your limbs
+the while in your pleasant parlour on Beretania Street. When I was
+pulled ashore there one early morning, there sat with me in the
+boat two sisters, bidding farewell (in humble imitation of Damien)
+to the lights and joys of human life. One of these wept silently;
+I could not withhold myself from joining her. Had you been there,
+it is my belief that nature would have triumphed even in you; and
+as the boat drew but a little nearer, and you beheld the stairs
+crowded with abominable deformations of our common manhood, and saw
+yourself landing in the midst of such a population as only now and
+then surrounds us in the horror of a nightmare - what a haggard eye
+you would have rolled over your reluctant shoulder towards the
+house on Beretania Street! Had you gone on; had you found every
+fourth face a blot upon the landscape; had you visited the hospital
+and seen the butt-ends of human beings lying there almost
+unrecognisable, but still breathing, still thinking, still
+remembering; you would have understood that life in the lazaretto
+is an ordeal from which the nerves of a man's spirit shrink, even
+as his eye quails under the brightness of the sun; you would have
+felt it was (even today) a pitiful place to visit and a hell to
+dwell in. It is not the fear of possible infection. That seems a
+little thing when compared with the pain, the pity, and the disgust
+of the visitor's surroundings, and the atmosphere of affliction,
+disease, and physical disgrace in which he breathes. I do not
+think I am a man more than usually timid; but I never recall the
+days and nights I spent upon that island promontory (eight days and
+seven nights), without heartfelt thankfulness that I am somewhere
+else. I find in my diary that I speak of my stay as a "grinding
+experience": I have once jotted in the margin, "HARROWING is the
+word"; and when the MOKOLII bore me at last towards the outer
+world, I kept repeating to myself, with a new conception of their
+pregnancy, those simple words of the song -
+
+" 'Tis the most distressful country that ever yet was seen."
+
+And observe: that which I saw and suffered from was a settlement
+purged, bettered, beautified; the new village built, the hospital
+and the Bishop-Home excellently arranged; the sisters, the poctor,
+and the missionaries, all indefatigable in their noble tasks. It
+was a different place when Damien came there and made this great
+renunciation, and slept that first night under a tree amidst his
+rotting brethren: alone with pestilence; and looking forward (with
+what courage, with what pitiful sinkings of dread, God only knows)
+to a lifetime of dressing sores and stumps.
+
+You will say, perhaps, I am too sensitive, that sights as painful
+abound in cancer hospitals and are confronted daily by doctors and
+nurses. I have long learned to admire and envy the doctors and the
+nurses. But there is no cancer hospital so large and populous as
+Kalawao and Kalaupapa; and in such a matter every fresh case, like
+every inch of length in the pipe of an organ, deepens the note of
+the impression; for what daunts the onlooker is that monstrous sum
+of human suffering by which he stands surrounded. Lastly, no
+doctor or nurse is called upon to enter once for all the doors of
+that gehenna; they do not say farewell, they need not abandon hope,
+on its sad threshold; they but go for a time to their high calling,
+and can look forward as they go to relief, to recreation, and to
+rest. But Damien shut-to with his own hand the doors of his own
+sepulchre.
+
+I shall now extract three passages from my diary at Kalawao.
+
+A. "Damien is dead and already somewhat ungratefully remembered in
+the field of his labours and sufferings. 'He was a good man, but
+very officious,' says one. Another tells me he had fallen (as
+other priests so easily do) into something of the ways and habits
+of thought of a Kanaka; but he had the wit to recognise the fact,
+and the good sense to laugh at" [over] "it. A plain man it seems
+he was; I cannot find he was a popular."
+
+B. "After Ragsdale's death" [Ragsdale was a famous Luna, or
+overseer, of the unruly settlement] "there followed a brief term of
+office by Father Damien which served only to publish the weakness
+of that noble man. He was rough in his ways, and he had no
+control. Authority was relaxed; Damien's life was threatened, and
+he was soon eager to resign."
+
+C. "Of Damien I begin to have an idea. He seems to have been a
+man of the peasant class, certainly of the peasant type: shrewd,
+ignorant and bigoted, yet with an open mind, and capable of
+receiving and digesting a reproof if it were bluntly administered;
+superbly generous in the least thing as well as in the greatest,
+and as ready to give his last shirt (although not without human
+grumbling) as he had been to sacrifice his life; essentially
+indiscreet and officious, which made him a troublesome colleague;
+domineering in all his ways, which made him incurably unpopular
+with the Kanakas, but yet destitute of real authority, so that his
+boys laughed at him and he must carry out his wishes by the means
+of bribes. He learned to have a mania for doctoring; and set up
+the Kanakas against the remedies of his regular rivals: perhaps (if
+anything matter at all in the treatment of such a disease) the
+worst thing that he did, and certainly the easiest. The best and
+worst of the man appear very plainly in his dealings with Mr.
+Chapman's money; he had originally laid it out" [intended to lay it
+out] "entirely for the benefit of Catholics, and even so not
+wisely; but after a long, plain talk, he admitted his error fully
+and revised the list. The sad state of the boys' home is in part
+the result of his lack of control; in part, of his own slovenly
+ways and false ideas of hygiene. Brother officials used to call it
+'Damien's Chinatown.' 'Well,' they would say, 'your Chinatown
+keeps growing.' And he would laugh with perfect good-nature, and
+adhere to his errors with perfect obstinacy. So much I have
+gathered of truth about this plain, noble human brother and father
+of ours; his imperfections are the traits of his face, by which we
+know him for our fellow; his martyrdom and his example nothing can
+lessen or annul; and only a person here on the spot can properly
+appreciate their greatness."
+
+I have set down these private passages, as you perceive, without
+correction; thanks to you, the public has them in their bluntness.
+They are almost a list of the man's faults, for it is rather these
+that I was seeking: with his virtues, with the heroic profile of
+his life, I and the world were already sufficiently acquainted. I
+was besides a little suspicious of Catholic testimony; in no ill
+sense, but merely because Damien's admirers and disciples were the
+least likely to be critical. I know you will be more suspicious
+still; and the facts set down above were one and all collected from
+the lips of Protestants who had opposed the father in his life.
+Yet I am strangely deceived, or they build up the image of a man,
+with all his weakness, essentially heroic, and alive with rugged
+honesty, generosity, and mirth.
+
+Take it for what it is, rough private jottings of the worst sides
+of Damien's character, collected from the lips of those who had
+laboured with and (in your own phrase) "knew the man"; - though I
+question whether Damien would have said that he knew you. Take it,
+and observe with wonder how well you were served by your gossips,
+how ill by your intelligence and sympathy; in how many points of
+fact we are at one, and how widely our appreciations vary. There
+is something wrong here; either with you or me. It is possible,
+for instance, that you, who seem to have so many ears in Kalawao,
+had heard of the affair of Mr. Chapman's money, and were singly
+struck by Damien's intended wrong-doing. I was struck with that
+also, and set it fairly down; but I was struck much more by the
+fact that he had the honesty of mind to be convinced. I may here
+tell you that it was a long business; that one of his colleagues
+sat with him late into the night, multiplying arguments and
+accusations; that the father listened as usual with "perfect good-
+nature and perfect obstinacy"; but at the last, when he was
+persuaded - "Yes," said he, "I am very much obliged to you; you
+have done me a service; it would have been a theft." There are
+many (not Catholics merely) who require their heroes and saints to
+be infallible; to these the story will be painful; not to the true
+lovers, patrons, and servants of mankind.
+
+And I take it, this is a type of our division; that you are one of
+those who have an eye for faults and failures; that you take a
+pleasure to find and publish them; and that, having found them, you
+make haste to forget the overvailing virtues and the real success
+which had alone introduced them to your knowledge. It is a
+dangerous frame of mind. That you may understand how dangerous,
+and into what a situation it has already brought you, we will (if
+you please) go hand-in-hand through the different phrases of your
+letter, and candidly examine each from the point of view of its
+truth, its appositeness, and its charity.
+
+Damien was COARSE.
+
+It is very possible. You make us sorry for the lepers, who had
+only a coarse old peasant for their friend and father. But you,
+who were so refined, why were you not there, to cheer them with the
+lights of culture? Or may I remind you that we have some reason to
+doubt if John the Baptist were genteel; and in the case of Peter,
+on whose career your doubtless dwell approvingly in the pulpit, no
+doubt at all he was a "coarse, headstrong" fisherman! Yet even in
+our Protestant Bibles Peter is called Saint.
+
+Damien was DIRTY.
+
+He was. Think of the poor lepers annoyed with this dirty comrade!
+But the clean Dr. Hyde was at his food in a fine house.
+
+Damien was HEADSTRONG.
+
+I believe you are right again; and I thank God for his strong head
+and heart.
+
+Damien was BIGOTED.
+
+I am not fond of bigots myself, because they are not fond of me.
+But what is meant by bigotry, that we should regard it as a blemish
+in a priest? Damien believed his own religion with the simplicity
+of a peasant or a child; as I would I could suppose that you do.
+For this, I wonder at him some way off; and had that been his only
+character, should have avoided him in life. But the point of
+interest in Damien, which has caused him to be so much talked about
+and made him at last the subject of your pen and mine, was that, in
+him, his bigotry, his intense and narrow faith, wrought potently
+for good, and strengthened him to be one of the world's heroes and
+exemplars.
+
+Damien WAS NOT SENT TO MOLOKAI, BUT WENT THERE WITHOUT ORDERS.
+
+Is this a misreading? or do you really mean the words for blame? I
+have heard Christ, in the pulpits of our Church, held up for
+imitation on the ground that His sacrifice was voluntary. Does Dr.
+Hyde think otherwise?
+
+Damien DID NOT STAY AT THE SETTLEMENT, ETC.
+
+It is true he was allowed many indulgences. Am I to understand
+that you blame the father for profiting by these, or the officers
+for granting them? In either case, it is a mighty Spartan standard
+to issue from the house on Beretania Street; and I am convinced you
+will find yourself with few supporters.
+
+Damien HAD NO HAND IN THE REFORMS, ETC.
+
+I think even you will admit that I have already been frank in my
+description of the man I am defending; but before I take you up
+upon this head, I will be franker still, and tell you that perhaps
+nowhere in the world can a man taste a more pleasurable sense of
+contrast than when he passes from Damien's "Chinatown" at Kalawao
+to the beautiful Bishop-Home at Kalaupapa. At this point, in my
+desire to make all fair for you, I will break my rule and adduce
+Catholic testimony. Here is a passage from my diary about my visit
+to the Chinatown, from which you will see how it is (even now)
+regarded by its own officials: "We went round all the dormitories,
+refectories, etc. - dark and dingy enough, with a superficial
+cleanliness, which he" [Mr. Dutton, the lay-brother] "did not seek
+to defend. 'It is almost decent,' said he; 'the sisters will make
+that all right when we get them here.' " And yet I gathered it was
+already better since Damien was dead, and far better than when he
+was there alone and had his own (not always excellent) way. I have
+now come far enough to meet you on a common ground of fact; and I
+tell you that, to a mind not prejudiced by jealousy, all the
+reforms of the lazaretto, and even those which he most vigorously
+opposed, are properly the work of Damien. They are the evidence of
+his success; they are what his heroism provoked from the reluctant
+and the careless. Many were before him in the field; Mr. Meyer,
+for instance, of whose faithful work we hear too little: there have
+been many since; and some had more worldly wisdom, though none had
+more devotion, than our saint. Before his day, even you will
+confess, they had effected little. It was his part, by one
+striking act of martyrdom, to direct all men's eyes on that
+distressful country. At a blow, and with the price of his life, he
+made the place illustrious and public. And that, if you will
+consider largely, was the one reform needful; pregnant of all that
+should succeed. It brought money; it brought (best individual
+addition of them all) the sisters; it brought supervision, for
+public opinion and public interest landed with the man at Kalawao.
+If ever any man brought reforms, and died to bring them, it was he.
+There is not a clean cup or towel in the Bishop-Home, but dirty
+Damien washed it.
+
+Damien WAS NOT A PURE MAN IN HIS RELATIONS WITH WOMEN, ETC
+
+How do you know that? Is this the nature of conversation in that
+house on Beretania Street which the cabman envied, driving past? -
+racy details of the misconduct of the poor peasant priest, toiling
+under the cliffs of Molokai?
+
+Many have visited the station before me; they seem not to have
+heard the rumour. When I was there I heard many shocking tales,
+for my informants were men speaking with the plainness of the
+laity; and I heard plenty of complaints of Damien. Why was this
+never mentioned? and how came it to you in the retirement of your
+clerical parlour?
+
+But I must not even seem to deceive you. This scandal, when I read
+it in your letter, was not new to me. I had heard it once before;
+and I must tell you how. There came to Samoa a man from Honolulu;
+he, in a public-house on the beach, volunteered the statement that
+Damien had "contracted the disease from having connection with the
+female lepers"; and I find a joy in telling you how the report was
+welcomed in a public-house. A man sprang to his feet; I am not at
+liberty to give his name, but from what I heard I doubt if you
+would care to have him to dinner in Beretania Street. "You
+miserable little -------" (here is a word I dare not print, it
+would so shock your ears). "You miserable little ------," he
+cried, "if the story were a thousand times true, can't you see you
+are a million times a lower ----- for daring to repeat it?" I wish
+it could be told of you that when the report reached you in your
+house, perhaps after family worship, you had found in your soul
+enough holy anger to receive it with the same expressions; ay, even
+with that one which I dare not print; it would not need to have
+been blotted away, like Uncle Toby's oath, by the tears of the
+recording angel; it would have been counted to you for your
+brightest righteousness. But you have deliberately chosen the part
+of the man from Honolulu, and you have played it with improvements
+of your own. The man from Honolulu - miserable, leering creature -
+communicated the tale to a rude knot of beach-combing drinkers in a
+public-house, where (I will so far agree with your temperance
+opinions) man is not always at his noblest; and the man from
+Honolulu had himself been drinking - drinking, we may charitably
+fancy, to excess. It was to your "Dear Brother, the Reverend H. B.
+Gage," that you chose to communicate the sickening story; and the
+blue ribbon which adorns your portly bosom forbids me to allow you
+the extenuating plea that you were drunk when it was done. Your
+"dear brother" - a brother indeed - made haste to deliver up your
+letter (as a means of grace, perhaps) to the religious papers;
+where, after many months, I found and read and wondered at it; and
+whence I have now reproduced it for the wonder of others. And you
+and your dear brother have, by this cycle of operations, built up a
+contrast very edifying to examine in detail. The man whom you
+would not care to have to dinner, on the one side; on the other,
+the Reverend Dr. Hyde and the Reverend H. B. Gage: the Apia bar-
+room, the Honolulu manse.
+
+But I fear you scarce appreciate how you appear to your fellow-men;
+and to bring it home to you, I will suppose your story to be true.
+I will suppose - and God forgive me for supposing it - that Damien
+faltered and stumbled in his narrow path of duty; I will suppose
+that, in the horror of his isolation, perhaps in the fever of
+incipient disease, he, who was doing so much more than he had
+sworn, failed in the letter of his priestly oath - he, who was so
+much a better man than either you or me, who did what we have never
+dreamed of daring - he too tasted of our common frailty. "O, Iago,
+the pity of it!" The least tender should be moved to tears; the
+most incredulous to prayer. And all that you could do was to pen
+your letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage!
+
+Is it growing at all clear to you what a picture you have drawn of
+your own heart? I will try yet once again to make it clearer. You
+had a father: suppose this tale were about him, and some informant
+brought it to you, proof in hand: I am not making too high an
+estimate of your emotional nature when I suppose you would regret
+the circumstance? that you would feel the tale of frailty the more
+keenly since it shamed the author of your days? and that the last
+thing you would do would be to publish it in the religious press?
+Well, the man who tried to do what Damien did, is my father, and
+the father of the man in the Apia bar, and the father of all who
+love goodness; and he was your father too, if God had given you
+grace to see it.
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Father Damien
+
+
+
+
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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">Father Damien, by Robert Louis Stevenson</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Father Damien, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Father Damien
+ an Open Letter to the Reverend Dr. Hyde of Honolulu
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 28, 2007 [eBook #281]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FATHER DAMIEN***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1914 Chatto &amp; Windus edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>FATHER DAMIEN<br />
+AN OPEN LETTER TO THE REVEREND DOCTOR HYDE OF HONOLULU<br />
+FROM<br />
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center">1914<br />
+<span class="smcap">london</span><br />
+<span class="smcap">chatto &amp; windus</span></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">A new impression<br />
+All rights reserved</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span
+class="smcap">Sydney</span>,<br />
+<i>February</i> 25, 1890.</p>
+<p>Sir,&mdash;It may probably occur to you that we have met, and
+visited, and conversed; on my side, with interest.&nbsp; You may
+remember that you have done me several courtesies, for which I
+was prepared to be grateful.&nbsp; But there are duties which
+come before gratitude, and offences which justly divide friends,
+far more acquaintances.&nbsp; Your letter to the Reverend H. B.
+Gage is a document which, in my sight, if you had filled me with
+bread when I was starving, if you had sat up to nurse my father
+when he lay a-dying, would yet absolve me from the bonds of
+gratitude.&nbsp; You know enough, doubtless, of the process of
+canonisation to be aware that, a hundred years after the death of
+Damien, there will appear a man charged with the painful office
+of the <i>devil&rsquo;s advocate</i>.&nbsp; After that noble
+brother of mine, and of all frail clay, shall have lain a century
+at rest, one shall accuse, one defend him.&nbsp; The circumstance
+is unusual that the devil&rsquo;s advocate should be a volunteer,
+should be a member of a sect immediately rival, and should make
+haste to take upon himself his ugly office ere the bones are
+cold; unusual, and of a taste which I shall leave my readers free
+to qualify; unusual, and to me inspiring.&nbsp; If I have at all
+learned the trade of using words to convey truth and to arouse
+emotion, you have at last furnished me with a subject.&nbsp; For
+it is in the interest of all mankind, and the cause of public
+decency in every quarter of the world, not only that Damien
+should be righted, but that you and your letter should be
+displayed at length, in their true colours, to the public
+eye.</p>
+<p>To do this properly, I must begin by quoting you at large: I
+shall then proceed to criticise your utterance from several
+points of view, divine and human, in the course of which I shall
+attempt to draw again, and with more specification, the character
+of the dead saint whom it has pleased you to vilify: so much
+being done, I shall say farewell to you for ever.</p>
+<blockquote><p style="text-align: right">&ldquo;<span
+class="smcap">Honolulu</span>,<br />
+&ldquo;<i>August</i> 2, 1889.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rev. H. B. GAGE.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear Brother,&mdash;In answer to your inquires about
+Father Damien, I can only reply that we who knew the man are
+surprised at the extravagant newspaper laudations, as if he was a
+most saintly philanthropist.&nbsp; The simple truth is, he was a
+coarse, dirty man, headstrong and bigoted.&nbsp; He was not sent
+to Molokai, but went there without orders; did not stay at the
+leper settlement (before he became one himself), but circulated
+freely over the whole island (less than half the island is
+devoted to the lepers), and he came often to Honolulu.&nbsp; He
+had no hand in the reforms and improvements inaugurated, which
+were the work of our Board of Health, as occasion required and
+means were provided.&nbsp; He was not a pure man in his relations
+with women, and the leprosy of which he died should be attributed
+to his vices and carelessness.&nbsp; Other have done much for the
+lepers, our own ministers, the government physicians, and so
+forth, but never with the Catholic idea of meriting eternal
+life.&mdash;Yours, etc.,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<span class="smcap">C. M. Hyde</span>&rdquo; <a
+name="citation1"></a><a href="#footnote1"
+class="citation">[1]</a></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To deal fitly with a letter so extraordinary, I must draw at
+the outset on my private knowledge of the signatory and his
+sect.&nbsp; It may offend others; scarcely you, who have been so
+busy to collect, so bold to publish, gossip on your rivals.&nbsp;
+And this is perhaps the moment when I may best explain to you the
+character of what you are to read: I conceive you as a man quite
+beyond and below the reticences of civility: with what measure
+you mete, with that shall it be measured you again; with you, at
+last, I rejoice to feel the button off the foil and to plunge
+home.&nbsp; And if in aught that I shall say I should offend
+others, your colleagues, whom I respect and remember with
+affection, I can but offer them my regret; I am not free, I am
+inspired by the consideration of interests far more large; and
+such pain as can be inflicted by anything from me must be indeed
+trifling when compared with the pain with which they read your
+letter.&nbsp; It is not the hangman, but the criminal, that
+brings dishonour on the house.</p>
+<p>You belong, sir, to a sect&mdash;I believe my sect, and that
+in which my ancestors laboured&mdash;which has enjoyed, and
+partly failed to utilise, and exceptional advantage in the
+islands of Hawaii.&nbsp; The first missionaries came; they found
+the land already self-purged of its old and bloody faith; they
+were embraced, almost on their arrival, with enthusiasm; what
+troubles they supported came far more from whites than from
+Hawaiians; and to these last they stood (in a rough figure) in
+the shoes of God.&nbsp; This is not the place to enter into the
+degree or causes of their failure, such as it is.&nbsp; One
+element alone is pertinent, and must here be plainly dealt
+with.&nbsp; In the course of their evangelical calling,
+they&mdash;or too many of them&mdash;grew rich.&nbsp; It may be
+news to you that the houses of missionaries are a cause of
+mocking on the streets of Honolulu.&nbsp; It will at least be
+news to you, that when I returned your civil visit, the driver of
+my cab commented on the size, the taste, and the comfort of your
+home.&nbsp; It would have been news certainly to myself, had any
+one told me that afternoon that I should live to drag such a
+matter into print.&nbsp; But you see, sir, how you degrade better
+men to your own level; and it is needful that those who are to
+judge betwixt you and me, betwixt Damien and the devil&rsquo;s
+advocate, should understand your letter to have been penned in a
+house which could raise, and that very justly, the envy and the
+comments of the passers-by.&nbsp; I think (to employ a phrase of
+yours which I admire) it &ldquo;should be attributed&rdquo; to
+you that you have never visited the scene of Damien&rsquo;s life
+and death.&nbsp; If you had, and had recalled it, and looked
+about your pleasant rooms, even your pen perhaps would have been
+stayed.</p>
+<p>Your sect (and remember, as far as any sect avows me, it is
+mine) has not done ill in a worldly sense in the Hawaiian
+Kingdom.&nbsp; When calamity befell their innocent parishioners,
+when leprosy descended and took root in the Eight Islands, a
+<i>quid pro quo</i> was to be looked for.&nbsp; To that
+prosperous mission, and to you, as one of its adornments, God had
+sent at last an opportunity.&nbsp; I know I am touching here upon
+a nerve acutely sensitive.&nbsp; I know that others of your
+colleagues look back on the inertia of your Church, and the
+intrusive and decisive heroism of Damien, with something almost
+to be called remorse.&nbsp; I am sure it is so with yourself; I
+am persuaded your letter was inspired by a certain envy, not
+essentially ignoble, and the one human trait to be espied in that
+performance.&nbsp; You were thinking of the lost chance, the past
+day; of that which should have been conceived and was not; of the
+service due and not rendered.&nbsp; <i>Time was</i>, said the
+voice in your ear, in your pleasant room, as you sat raging and
+writing; and if the words written were base beyond parallel, the
+rage, I am happy to repeat&mdash;it is the only compliment I
+shall pay you&mdash;the rage was almost virtuous.&nbsp; But, sir,
+when we have failed, and another has succeeded; when we have
+stood by, and another has stepped in; when we sit and grow bulky
+in our charming mansions, and a plain, uncouth peasant steps into
+the battle, under the eyes of God, and succours the afflicted,
+and consoles the dying, and is himself afflicted in his turn, and
+dies upon the field of honour&mdash;the battle cannot be
+retrieved as your unhappy irritation has suggested.&nbsp; It is a
+lost battle, and lost for ever.&nbsp; One thing remained to you
+in your defeat&mdash;some rags of common honour; and these you
+have made haste to cast away.</p>
+<p>Common honour; not the honour of having done anything right,
+but the honour of not having done aught conspicuously foul; the
+honour of the inert: that was what remained to you.&nbsp; We are
+not all expected to be Damiens; a man may conceive his duty more
+narrowly, he may love his comforts better; and none will cast a
+stone at him for that.&nbsp; But will a gentleman of your
+reverend profession allow me an example from the fields of
+gallantry?&nbsp; When two gentlemen compete for the favour of a
+lady, and the one succeeds and the other is rejected, and (as
+will sometimes happen) matter damaging to the successful
+rival&rsquo;s credit reaches the ear of the defeated, it is held
+by plain men of no pretensions that his mouth is, in the
+circumstance, almost necessarily closed.&nbsp; Your Church and
+Damien&rsquo;s were in Hawaii upon a rivalry to do well: to help,
+to edify, to set divine examples.&nbsp; You having (in one huge
+instance) failed, and Damien succeeded, I marvel it should not
+have occurred to you that you were doomed to silence; that when
+you had been outstripped in that high rivalry, and sat inglorious
+in the midst of your well-being, in your pleasant room&mdash;and
+Damien, crowned with glories and horrors, toiled and rotted in
+that pigsty of his under the cliffs of Kalawao&mdash;you, the
+elect who would not, were the last man on earth to collect and
+propagate gossip on the volunteer who would and did.</p>
+<p>I think I see you&mdash;for I try to see you in the flesh as I
+write these sentences&mdash;I think I see you leap at the word
+pigsty, a hyperbolical expression at the best.&nbsp; &ldquo;He
+had no hand in the reforms,&rdquo; he was &ldquo;a coarse, dirty
+man&rdquo;; these were your own words; and you may think it
+possible that I am come to support you with fresh evidence.&nbsp;
+In a sense, it is even so.&nbsp; Damien has been too much
+depicted with a conventional halo and conventional features; so
+drawn by men who perhaps had not the eye to remark or the pen to
+express the individual; or who perhaps were only blinded and
+silenced by generous admiration, such as I partly envy for
+myself&mdash;such as you, if your soul were enlightened, would
+envy on your bended knees.&nbsp; It is the least defect of such a
+method of portraiture that it makes the path easy for the
+devil&rsquo;s advocate, and leaves the misuse of the slanderer a
+considerable field of truth.&nbsp; For the truth that is
+suppressed by friends is the readiest weapon of the enemy.&nbsp;
+The world, in your despite, may perhaps owe you something, if
+your letter be the means of substituting once for all a credible
+likeness for a wax abstraction.&nbsp; For, if that world at all
+remember you, on the day when Damien of Molokai shall be named a
+Saint, it will be in virtue of one work: your letter to the
+Reverend H. B. Gage.</p>
+<p>You may ask on what authority I speak.&nbsp; It was my
+inclement destiny to become acquainted, not with Damien, but with
+Dr. Hyde.&nbsp; When I visited the lazaretto, Damien was already
+in his resting grave.&nbsp; But such information as I have, I
+gathered on the spot in conversation with those who knew him well
+and long: some indeed who revered his memory; but others who had
+sparred and wrangled with him, who beheld him with no halo, who
+perhaps regarded him with small respect, and through whose
+unprepared and scarcely partial communications the plain, human
+features of the man shone on me convincingly.&nbsp; These gave me
+what knowledge I possess; and I learnt it in that scene where it
+could be most completely and sensitively
+understood&mdash;Kalawao, which you have never visited, about
+which you have never so much as endeavoured to inform yourself;
+for, brief as your letter is, you have found the means to stumble
+into that confession.&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>Less than one-half</i> of
+the island,&rdquo; you say, &ldquo;is devoted to the
+lepers.&rdquo;&nbsp; Molokai&mdash;&ldquo;<i>Molokai
+ahina</i>,&rdquo; the &ldquo;grey,&rdquo; lofty, and most
+desolate island&mdash;along all its northern side plunges a front
+of precipice into a sea of unusual profundity.&nbsp; This range
+of cliff is, from east to west, the true end and frontier of the
+island.&nbsp; Only in one spot there projects into the ocean a
+certain triangular and rugged down, grassy, stony, windy, and
+rising in the midst into a hill with a dead crater: the whole
+bearing to the cliff that overhangs it somewhat the same relation
+as a bracket to a wall.&nbsp; With this hint you will now be able
+to pick out the leper station on a map; you will be able to judge
+how much of Molokai is thus cut off between the surf and
+precipice, whether less than a half, or less than a quarter, or a
+fifth, or a tenth&mdash;or, say a twentieth; and the next time
+you burst into print you will be in a position to share with us
+the issue of your calculations.</p>
+<p>I imagine you to be one of those persons who talk with
+cheerfulness of that place which oxen and wain-ropes could not
+drag you to behold.&nbsp; You, who do not even know its situation
+on the map, probably denounce sensational descriptions,
+stretching your limbs the while in your pleasant parlour on
+Beretania Street.&nbsp; When I was pulled ashore there one early
+morning, there sat with me in the boat two sisters, bidding
+farewell (in humble imitation of Damien) to the lights and joys
+of human life.&nbsp; One of these wept silently; I could not
+withhold myself from joining her.&nbsp; Had you been there, it is
+my belief that nature would have triumphed even in you; and as
+the boat drew but a little nearer, and you beheld the stairs
+crowded with abominable deformations of our common manhood, and
+saw yourself landing in the midst of such a population as only
+now and then surrounds us in the horror of a nightmare&mdash;what
+a haggard eye you would have rolled over your reluctant shoulder
+towards the house on Beretania Street!&nbsp; Had you gone on; had
+you found every fourth face a blot upon the landscape; had you
+visited the hospital and seen the butt-ends of human beings lying
+there almost unrecognisable, but still breathing, still thinking,
+still remembering; you would have understood that life in the
+lazaretto is an ordeal from which the nerves of a man&rsquo;s
+spirit shrink, even as his eye quails under the brightness of the
+sun; you would have felt it was (even today) a pitiful place to
+visit and a hell to dwell in.&nbsp; It is not the fear of
+possible infection.&nbsp; That seems a little thing when compared
+with the pain, the pity, and the disgust of the visitor&rsquo;s
+surroundings, and the atmosphere of affliction, disease, and
+physical disgrace in which he breathes.&nbsp; I do not think I am
+a man more than usually timid; but I never recall the days and
+nights I spent upon that island promontory (eight days and seven
+nights), without heartfelt thankfulness that I am somewhere
+else.&nbsp; I find in my diary that I speak of my stay as a
+&ldquo;grinding experience&rdquo;: I have once jotted in the
+margin, &ldquo;<i>Harrowing</i> is the word&rdquo;; and when the
+<i>Mokolii</i> bore me at last towards the outer world, I kept
+repeating to myself, with a new conception of their pregnancy,
+those simple words of the song&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis the most distressful country
+that ever yet was seen.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>And observe: that which I saw and suffered from was a
+settlement purged, bettered, beautified; the new village built,
+the hospital and the Bishop-Home excellently arranged; the
+sisters, the doctor, and the missionaries, all indefatigable in
+their noble tasks.&nbsp; It was a different place when Damien
+came there and made this great renunciation, and slept that first
+night under a tree amidst his rotting brethren: alone with
+pestilence; and looking forward (with what courage, with what
+pitiful sinkings of dread, God only knows) to a lifetime of
+dressing sores and stumps.</p>
+<p>You will say, perhaps, I am too sensitive, that sights as
+painful abound in cancer hospitals and are confronted daily by
+doctors and nurses.&nbsp; I have long learned to admire and envy
+the doctors and the nurses.&nbsp; But there is no cancer hospital
+so large and populous as Kalawao and Kalaupapa; and in such a
+matter every fresh case, like every inch of length in the pipe of
+an organ, deepens the note of the impression; for what daunts the
+onlooker is that monstrous sum of human suffering by which he
+stands surrounded.&nbsp; Lastly, no doctor or nurse is called
+upon to enter once for all the doors of that gehenna; they do not
+say farewell, they need not abandon hope, on its sad threshold;
+they but go for a time to their high calling, and can look
+forward as they go to relief, to recreation, and to rest.&nbsp;
+But Damien shut-to with his own hand the doors of his own
+sepulchre.</p>
+<p>I shall now extract three passages from my diary at
+Kalawao.</p>
+<p><i>A</i>.&nbsp; &ldquo;Damien is dead and already somewhat
+ungratefully remembered in the field of his labours and
+sufferings.&nbsp; &lsquo;He was a good man, but very
+officious,&rsquo; says one.&nbsp; Another tells me he had fallen
+(as other priests so easily do) into something of the ways and
+habits of thought of a Kanaka; but he had the wit to recognise
+the fact, and the good sense to laugh at&rdquo; [over]
+&ldquo;it.&nbsp; A plain man it seems he was; I cannot find he
+was a popular.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>B</i>.&nbsp; &ldquo;After Ragsdale&rsquo;s death&rdquo;
+[Ragsdale was a famous Luna, or overseer, of the unruly
+settlement] &ldquo;there followed a brief term of office by
+Father Damien which served only to publish the weakness of that
+noble man.&nbsp; He was rough in his ways, and he had no
+control.&nbsp; Authority was relaxed; Damien&rsquo;s life was
+threatened, and he was soon eager to resign.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>C</i>.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of Damien I begin to have an
+idea.&nbsp; He seems to have been a man of the peasant class,
+certainly of the peasant type: shrewd, ignorant and bigoted, yet
+with an open mind, and capable of receiving and digesting a
+reproof if it were bluntly administered; superbly generous in the
+least thing as well as in the greatest, and as ready to give his
+last shirt (although not without human grumbling) as he had been
+to sacrifice his life; essentially indiscreet and officious,
+which made him a troublesome colleague; domineering in all his
+ways, which made him incurably unpopular with the Kanakas, but
+yet destitute of real authority, so that his boys laughed at him
+and he must carry out his wishes by the means of bribes.&nbsp; He
+learned to have a mania for doctoring; and set up the Kanakas
+against the remedies of his regular rivals: perhaps (if anything
+matter at all in the treatment of such a disease) the worst thing
+that he did, and certainly the easiest.&nbsp; The best and worst
+of the man appear very plainly in his dealings with Mr.
+Chapman&rsquo;s money; he had originally laid it out&rdquo;
+[intended to lay it out] &ldquo;entirely for the benefit of
+Catholics, and even so not wisely; but after a long, plain talk,
+he admitted his error fully and revised the list.&nbsp; The sad
+state of the boys&rsquo; home is in part the result of his lack
+of control; in part, of his own slovenly ways and false ideas of
+hygiene.&nbsp; Brother officials used to call it
+&lsquo;Damien&rsquo;s Chinatown.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo;
+they would say, &lsquo;your Chinatown keeps growing.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And he would laugh with perfect good-nature, and adhere to his
+errors with perfect obstinacy.&nbsp; So much I have gathered of
+truth about this plain, noble human brother and father of ours;
+his imperfections are the traits of his face, by which we know
+him for our fellow; his martyrdom and his example nothing can
+lessen or annul; and only a person here on the spot can properly
+appreciate their greatness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have set down these private passages, as you perceive,
+without correction; thanks to you, the public has them in their
+bluntness.&nbsp; They are almost a list of the man&rsquo;s
+faults, for it is rather these that I was seeking: with his
+virtues, with the heroic profile of his life, I and the world
+were already sufficiently acquainted.&nbsp; I was besides a
+little suspicious of Catholic testimony; in no ill sense, but
+merely because Damien&rsquo;s admirers and disciples were the
+least likely to be critical.&nbsp; I know you will be more
+suspicious still; and the facts set down above were one and all
+collected from the lips of Protestants who had opposed the father
+in his life.&nbsp; Yet I am strangely deceived, or they build up
+the image of a man, with all his weakness, essentially heroic,
+and alive with rugged honesty, generosity, and mirth.</p>
+<p>Take it for what it is, rough private jottings of the worst
+sides of Damien&rsquo;s character, collected from the lips of
+those who had laboured with and (in your own phrase) &ldquo;knew
+the man&rdquo;;&mdash;though I question whether Damien would have
+said that he knew you.&nbsp; Take it, and observe with wonder how
+well you were served by your gossips, how ill by your
+intelligence and sympathy; in how many points of fact we are at
+one, and how widely our appreciations vary.&nbsp; There is
+something wrong here; either with you or me.&nbsp; It is
+possible, for instance, that you, who seem to have so many ears
+in Kalawao, had heard of the affair of Mr. Chapman&rsquo;s money,
+and were singly struck by Damien&rsquo;s intended
+wrong-doing.&nbsp; I was struck with that also, and set it fairly
+down; but I was struck much more by the fact that he had the
+honesty of mind to be convinced.&nbsp; I may here tell you that
+it was a long business; that one of his colleagues sat with him
+late into the night, multiplying arguments and accusations; that
+the father listened as usual with &ldquo;perfect good-nature and
+perfect obstinacy&rdquo;; but at the last, when he was
+persuaded&mdash;&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I am very much
+obliged to you; you have done me a service; it would have been a
+theft.&rdquo;&nbsp; There are many (not Catholics merely) who
+require their heroes and saints to be infallible; to these the
+story will be painful; not to the true lovers, patrons, and
+servants of mankind.</p>
+<p>And I take it, this is a type of our division; that you are
+one of those who have an eye for faults and failures; that you
+take a pleasure to find and publish them; and that, having found
+them, you make haste to forget the overvailing virtues and the
+real success which had alone introduced them to your
+knowledge.&nbsp; It is a dangerous frame of mind.&nbsp; That you
+may understand how dangerous, and into what a situation it has
+already brought you, we will (if you please) go hand-in-hand
+through the different phrases of your letter, and candidly
+examine each from the point of view of its truth, its
+appositeness, and its charity.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien was <i>coarse</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is very possible.&nbsp; You make us sorry for the lepers,
+who had only a coarse old peasant for their friend and
+father.&nbsp; But you, who were so refined, why were you not
+there, to cheer them with the lights of culture?&nbsp; Or may I
+remind you that we have some reason to doubt if John the Baptist
+were genteel; and in the case of Peter, on whose career your
+doubtless dwell approvingly in the pulpit, no doubt at all he was
+a &ldquo;coarse, headstrong&rdquo; fisherman!&nbsp; Yet even in
+our Protestant Bibles Peter is called Saint.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien was <i>dirty</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>He was.&nbsp; Think of the poor lepers annoyed with this dirty
+comrade!&nbsp; But the clean Dr. Hyde was at his food in a fine
+house.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien was <i>headstrong</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I believe you are right again; and I thank God for his strong
+head and heart.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien was <i>bigoted</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I am not fond of bigots myself, because they are not fond of
+me.&nbsp; But what is meant by bigotry, that we should regard it
+as a blemish in a priest?&nbsp; Damien believed his own religion
+with the simplicity of a peasant or a child; as I would I could
+suppose that you do.&nbsp; For this, I wonder at him some way
+off; and had that been his only character, should have avoided
+him in life.&nbsp; But the point of interest in Damien, which has
+caused him to be so much talked about and made him at last the
+subject of your pen and mine, was that, in him, his bigotry, his
+intense and narrow faith, wrought potently for good, and
+strengthened him to be one of the world&rsquo;s heroes and
+exemplars.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien <i>was not sent to Molokai</i>, <i>but went
+there without orders</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Is this a misreading? or do you really mean the words for
+blame?&nbsp; I have heard Christ, in the pulpits of our Church,
+held up for imitation on the ground that His sacrifice was
+voluntary.&nbsp; Does Dr. Hyde think otherwise?</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien <i>did not stay at the settlement</i>,
+<i>etc.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>It is true he was allowed many indulgences.&nbsp; Am I to
+understand that you blame the father for profiting by these, or
+the officers for granting them?&nbsp; In either case, it is a
+mighty Spartan standard to issue from the house on Beretania
+Street; and I am convinced you will find yourself with few
+supporters.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien <i>had no hand in the reforms</i>,
+<i>etc.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I think even you will admit that I have already been frank in
+my description of the man I am defending; but before I take you
+up upon this head, I will be franker still, and tell you that
+perhaps nowhere in the world can a man taste a more pleasurable
+sense of contrast than when he passes from Damien&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Chinatown&rdquo; at Kalawao to the beautiful Bishop-Home
+at Kalaupapa.&nbsp; At this point, in my desire to make all fair
+for you, I will break my rule and adduce Catholic
+testimony.&nbsp; Here is a passage from my diary about my visit
+to the Chinatown, from which you will see how it is (even now)
+regarded by its own officials: &ldquo;We went round all the
+dormitories, refectories, etc.&mdash;dark and dingy enough, with
+a superficial cleanliness, which he&rdquo; [Mr. Dutton, the
+lay-brother] &ldquo;did not seek to defend.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is
+almost decent,&rsquo; said he; &lsquo;the sisters will make that
+all right when we get them here.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; And yet I
+gathered it was already better since Damien was dead, and far
+better than when he was there alone and had his own (not always
+excellent) way.&nbsp; I have now come far enough to meet you on a
+common ground of fact; and I tell you that, to a mind not
+prejudiced by jealousy, all the reforms of the lazaretto, and
+even those which he most vigorously opposed, are properly the
+work of Damien.&nbsp; They are the evidence of his success; they
+are what his heroism provoked from the reluctant and the
+careless.&nbsp; Many were before him in the field; Mr. Meyer, for
+instance, of whose faithful work we hear too little: there have
+been many since; and some had more worldly wisdom, though none
+had more devotion, than our saint.&nbsp; Before his day, even you
+will confess, they had effected little.&nbsp; It was his part, by
+one striking act of martyrdom, to direct all men&rsquo;s eyes on
+that distressful country.&nbsp; At a blow, and with the price of
+his life, he made the place illustrious and public.&nbsp; And
+that, if you will consider largely, was the one reform needful;
+pregnant of all that should succeed.&nbsp; It brought money; it
+brought (best individual addition of them all) the sisters; it
+brought supervision, for public opinion and public interest
+landed with the man at Kalawao.&nbsp; If ever any man brought
+reforms, and died to bring them, it was he.&nbsp; There is not a
+clean cup or towel in the Bishop-Home, but dirty Damien washed
+it.</p>
+<blockquote><p>Damien <i>was not a pure man in his relations with
+women</i>, <i>etc.</i></p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>How do you know that?&nbsp; Is this the nature of conversation
+in that house on Beretania Street which the cabman envied,
+driving past?&mdash;racy details of the misconduct of the poor
+peasant priest, toiling under the cliffs of Molokai?</p>
+<p>Many have visited the station before me; they seem not to have
+heard the rumour.&nbsp; When I was there I heard many shocking
+tales, for my informants were men speaking with the plainness of
+the laity; and I heard plenty of complaints of Damien.&nbsp; Why
+was this never mentioned? and how came it to you in the
+retirement of your clerical parlour?</p>
+<p>But I must not even seem to deceive you.&nbsp; This scandal,
+when I read it in your letter, was not new to me.&nbsp; I had
+heard it once before; and I must tell you how.&nbsp; There came
+to Samoa a man from Honolulu; he, in a public-house on the beach,
+volunteered the statement that Damien had &ldquo;contracted the
+disease from having connection with the female lepers&rdquo;; and
+I find a joy in telling you how the report was welcomed in a
+public-house.&nbsp; A man sprang to his feet; I am not at liberty
+to give his name, but from what I heard I doubt if you would care
+to have him to dinner in Beretania Street.&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+miserable little -------&rdquo; (here is a word I dare not print,
+it would so shock your ears).&nbsp; &ldquo;You miserable little
+------,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;if the story were a thousand
+times true, can&rsquo;t you see you are a million times a lower
+----- for daring to repeat it?&rdquo;&nbsp; I wish it could be
+told of you that when the report reached you in your house,
+perhaps after family worship, you had found in your soul enough
+holy anger to receive it with the same expressions; ay, even with
+that one which I dare not print; it would not need to have been
+blotted away, like Uncle Toby&rsquo;s oath, by the tears of the
+recording angel; it would have been counted to you for your
+brightest righteousness.&nbsp; But you have deliberately chosen
+the part of the man from Honolulu, and you have played it with
+improvements of your own.&nbsp; The man from
+Honolulu&mdash;miserable, leering creature&mdash;communicated the
+tale to a rude knot of beach-combing drinkers in a public-house,
+where (I will so far agree with your temperance opinions) man is
+not always at his noblest; and the man from Honolulu had himself
+been drinking&mdash;drinking, we may charitably fancy, to
+excess.&nbsp; It was to your &ldquo;Dear Brother, the Reverend H.
+B. Gage,&rdquo; that you chose to communicate the sickening
+story; and the blue ribbon which adorns your portly bosom forbids
+me to allow you the extenuating plea that you were drunk when it
+was done.&nbsp; Your &ldquo;dear brother&rdquo;&mdash;a brother
+indeed&mdash;made haste to deliver up your letter (as a means of
+grace, perhaps) to the religious papers; where, after many
+months, I found and read and wondered at it; and whence I have
+now reproduced it for the wonder of others.&nbsp; And you and
+your dear brother have, by this cycle of operations, built up a
+contrast very edifying to examine in detail.&nbsp; The man whom
+you would not care to have to dinner, on the one side; on the
+other, the Reverend Dr. Hyde and the Reverend H. B. Gage: the
+Apia bar-room, the Honolulu manse.</p>
+<p>But I fear you scarce appreciate how you appear to your
+fellow-men; and to bring it home to you, I will suppose your
+story to be true.&nbsp; I will suppose&mdash;and God forgive me
+for supposing it&mdash;that Damien faltered and stumbled in his
+narrow path of duty; I will suppose that, in the horror of his
+isolation, perhaps in the fever of incipient disease, he, who was
+doing so much more than he had sworn, failed in the letter of his
+priestly oath&mdash;he, who was so much a better man than either
+you or me, who did what we have never dreamed of daring&mdash;he
+too tasted of our common frailty.&nbsp; &ldquo;O, Iago, the pity
+of it!&rdquo;&nbsp; The least tender should be moved to tears;
+the most incredulous to prayer.&nbsp; And all that you could do
+was to pen your letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage!</p>
+<p>Is it growing at all clear to you what a picture you have
+drawn of your own heart?&nbsp; I will try yet once again to make
+it clearer.&nbsp; You had a father: suppose this tale were about
+him, and some informant brought it to you, proof in hand: I am
+not making too high an estimate of your emotional nature when I
+suppose you would regret the circumstance? that you would feel
+the tale of frailty the more keenly since it shamed the author of
+your days? and that the last thing you would do would be to
+publish it in the religious press?&nbsp; Well, the man who tried
+to do what Damien did, is my father, and the father of the man in
+the Apia bar, and the father of all who love goodness; and he was
+your father too, if God had given you grace to see it.</p>
+<h2>Footnotes</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote1"></a><a href="#citation1"
+class="footnote">[1]</a>&nbsp; From the Sydney
+<i>Presbyterian</i>, October 26, 1889.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FATHER DAMIEN***</p>
+<pre>
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+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Father Damien, by Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Father Damien
+ an Open Letter to the Reverend Dr. Hyde of Honolulu
+
+
+Author: Robert Louis Stevenson
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 28, 2007 [eBook #281]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FATHER DAMIEN***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1914 Chatto & Windus edition by David Price, email
+ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+FATHER DAMIEN
+AN OPEN LETTER TO THE REVEREND DOCTOR HYDE OF HONOLULU
+FROM
+ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
+
+
+1914
+LONDON
+CHATTO & WINDUS
+
+A new impression
+All rights reserved
+
+SYDNEY,
+_February_ 25, 1890.
+
+Sir,--It may probably occur to you that we have met, and visited, and
+conversed; on my side, with interest. You may remember that you have
+done me several courtesies, for which I was prepared to be grateful. But
+there are duties which come before gratitude, and offences which justly
+divide friends, far more acquaintances. Your letter to the Reverend H.
+B. Gage is a document which, in my sight, if you had filled me with bread
+when I was starving, if you had sat up to nurse my father when he lay a-
+dying, would yet absolve me from the bonds of gratitude. You know
+enough, doubtless, of the process of canonisation to be aware that, a
+hundred years after the death of Damien, there will appear a man charged
+with the painful office of the _devil's advocate_. After that noble
+brother of mine, and of all frail clay, shall have lain a century at
+rest, one shall accuse, one defend him. The circumstance is unusual that
+the devil's advocate should be a volunteer, should be a member of a sect
+immediately rival, and should make haste to take upon himself his ugly
+office ere the bones are cold; unusual, and of a taste which I shall
+leave my readers free to qualify; unusual, and to me inspiring. If I
+have at all learned the trade of using words to convey truth and to
+arouse emotion, you have at last furnished me with a subject. For it is
+in the interest of all mankind, and the cause of public decency in every
+quarter of the world, not only that Damien should be righted, but that
+you and your letter should be displayed at length, in their true colours,
+to the public eye.
+
+To do this properly, I must begin by quoting you at large: I shall then
+proceed to criticise your utterance from several points of view, divine
+and human, in the course of which I shall attempt to draw again, and with
+more specification, the character of the dead saint whom it has pleased
+you to vilify: so much being done, I shall say farewell to you for ever.
+
+ "HONOLULU,
+ "_August_ 2, 1889.
+
+ "Rev. H. B. GAGE.
+
+ "Dear Brother,--In answer to your inquires about Father Damien, I can
+ only reply that we who knew the man are surprised at the extravagant
+ newspaper laudations, as if he was a most saintly philanthropist. The
+ simple truth is, he was a coarse, dirty man, headstrong and bigoted.
+ He was not sent to Molokai, but went there without orders; did not
+ stay at the leper settlement (before he became one himself), but
+ circulated freely over the whole island (less than half the island is
+ devoted to the lepers), and he came often to Honolulu. He had no hand
+ in the reforms and improvements inaugurated, which were the work of
+ our Board of Health, as occasion required and means were provided. He
+ was not a pure man in his relations with women, and the leprosy of
+ which he died should be attributed to his vices and carelessness.
+ Other have done much for the lepers, our own ministers, the government
+ physicians, and so forth, but never with the Catholic idea of meriting
+ eternal life.--Yours, etc.,
+
+ "C. M. HYDE" {1}
+
+To deal fitly with a letter so extraordinary, I must draw at the outset
+on my private knowledge of the signatory and his sect. It may offend
+others; scarcely you, who have been so busy to collect, so bold to
+publish, gossip on your rivals. And this is perhaps the moment when I
+may best explain to you the character of what you are to read: I conceive
+you as a man quite beyond and below the reticences of civility: with what
+measure you mete, with that shall it be measured you again; with you, at
+last, I rejoice to feel the button off the foil and to plunge home. And
+if in aught that I shall say I should offend others, your colleagues,
+whom I respect and remember with affection, I can but offer them my
+regret; I am not free, I am inspired by the consideration of interests
+far more large; and such pain as can be inflicted by anything from me
+must be indeed trifling when compared with the pain with which they read
+your letter. It is not the hangman, but the criminal, that brings
+dishonour on the house.
+
+You belong, sir, to a sect--I believe my sect, and that in which my
+ancestors laboured--which has enjoyed, and partly failed to utilise, and
+exceptional advantage in the islands of Hawaii. The first missionaries
+came; they found the land already self-purged of its old and bloody
+faith; they were embraced, almost on their arrival, with enthusiasm; what
+troubles they supported came far more from whites than from Hawaiians;
+and to these last they stood (in a rough figure) in the shoes of God.
+This is not the place to enter into the degree or causes of their
+failure, such as it is. One element alone is pertinent, and must here be
+plainly dealt with. In the course of their evangelical calling, they--or
+too many of them--grew rich. It may be news to you that the houses of
+missionaries are a cause of mocking on the streets of Honolulu. It will
+at least be news to you, that when I returned your civil visit, the
+driver of my cab commented on the size, the taste, and the comfort of
+your home. It would have been news certainly to myself, had any one told
+me that afternoon that I should live to drag such a matter into print.
+But you see, sir, how you degrade better men to your own level; and it is
+needful that those who are to judge betwixt you and me, betwixt Damien
+and the devil's advocate, should understand your letter to have been
+penned in a house which could raise, and that very justly, the envy and
+the comments of the passers-by. I think (to employ a phrase of yours
+which I admire) it "should be attributed" to you that you have never
+visited the scene of Damien's life and death. If you had, and had
+recalled it, and looked about your pleasant rooms, even your pen perhaps
+would have been stayed.
+
+Your sect (and remember, as far as any sect avows me, it is mine) has not
+done ill in a worldly sense in the Hawaiian Kingdom. When calamity
+befell their innocent parishioners, when leprosy descended and took root
+in the Eight Islands, a _quid pro quo_ was to be looked for. To that
+prosperous mission, and to you, as one of its adornments, God had sent at
+last an opportunity. I know I am touching here upon a nerve acutely
+sensitive. I know that others of your colleagues look back on the
+inertia of your Church, and the intrusive and decisive heroism of Damien,
+with something almost to be called remorse. I am sure it is so with
+yourself; I am persuaded your letter was inspired by a certain envy, not
+essentially ignoble, and the one human trait to be espied in that
+performance. You were thinking of the lost chance, the past day; of that
+which should have been conceived and was not; of the service due and not
+rendered. _Time was_, said the voice in your ear, in your pleasant room,
+as you sat raging and writing; and if the words written were base beyond
+parallel, the rage, I am happy to repeat--it is the only compliment I
+shall pay you--the rage was almost virtuous. But, sir, when we have
+failed, and another has succeeded; when we have stood by, and another has
+stepped in; when we sit and grow bulky in our charming mansions, and a
+plain, uncouth peasant steps into the battle, under the eyes of God, and
+succours the afflicted, and consoles the dying, and is himself afflicted
+in his turn, and dies upon the field of honour--the battle cannot be
+retrieved as your unhappy irritation has suggested. It is a lost battle,
+and lost for ever. One thing remained to you in your defeat--some rags
+of common honour; and these you have made haste to cast away.
+
+Common honour; not the honour of having done anything right, but the
+honour of not having done aught conspicuously foul; the honour of the
+inert: that was what remained to you. We are not all expected to be
+Damiens; a man may conceive his duty more narrowly, he may love his
+comforts better; and none will cast a stone at him for that. But will a
+gentleman of your reverend profession allow me an example from the fields
+of gallantry? When two gentlemen compete for the favour of a lady, and
+the one succeeds and the other is rejected, and (as will sometimes
+happen) matter damaging to the successful rival's credit reaches the ear
+of the defeated, it is held by plain men of no pretensions that his mouth
+is, in the circumstance, almost necessarily closed. Your Church and
+Damien's were in Hawaii upon a rivalry to do well: to help, to edify, to
+set divine examples. You having (in one huge instance) failed, and
+Damien succeeded, I marvel it should not have occurred to you that you
+were doomed to silence; that when you had been outstripped in that high
+rivalry, and sat inglorious in the midst of your well-being, in your
+pleasant room--and Damien, crowned with glories and horrors, toiled and
+rotted in that pigsty of his under the cliffs of Kalawao--you, the elect
+who would not, were the last man on earth to collect and propagate gossip
+on the volunteer who would and did.
+
+I think I see you--for I try to see you in the flesh as I write these
+sentences--I think I see you leap at the word pigsty, a hyperbolical
+expression at the best. "He had no hand in the reforms," he was "a
+coarse, dirty man"; these were your own words; and you may think it
+possible that I am come to support you with fresh evidence. In a sense,
+it is even so. Damien has been too much depicted with a conventional
+halo and conventional features; so drawn by men who perhaps had not the
+eye to remark or the pen to express the individual; or who perhaps were
+only blinded and silenced by generous admiration, such as I partly envy
+for myself--such as you, if your soul were enlightened, would envy on
+your bended knees. It is the least defect of such a method of
+portraiture that it makes the path easy for the devil's advocate, and
+leaves the misuse of the slanderer a considerable field of truth. For
+the truth that is suppressed by friends is the readiest weapon of the
+enemy. The world, in your despite, may perhaps owe you something, if
+your letter be the means of substituting once for all a credible likeness
+for a wax abstraction. For, if that world at all remember you, on the
+day when Damien of Molokai shall be named a Saint, it will be in virtue
+of one work: your letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage.
+
+You may ask on what authority I speak. It was my inclement destiny to
+become acquainted, not with Damien, but with Dr. Hyde. When I visited
+the lazaretto, Damien was already in his resting grave. But such
+information as I have, I gathered on the spot in conversation with those
+who knew him well and long: some indeed who revered his memory; but
+others who had sparred and wrangled with him, who beheld him with no
+halo, who perhaps regarded him with small respect, and through whose
+unprepared and scarcely partial communications the plain, human features
+of the man shone on me convincingly. These gave me what knowledge I
+possess; and I learnt it in that scene where it could be most completely
+and sensitively understood--Kalawao, which you have never visited, about
+which you have never so much as endeavoured to inform yourself; for,
+brief as your letter is, you have found the means to stumble into that
+confession. "_Less than one-half_ of the island," you say, "is devoted
+to the lepers." Molokai--"_Molokai ahina_," the "grey," lofty, and most
+desolate island--along all its northern side plunges a front of precipice
+into a sea of unusual profundity. This range of cliff is, from east to
+west, the true end and frontier of the island. Only in one spot there
+projects into the ocean a certain triangular and rugged down, grassy,
+stony, windy, and rising in the midst into a hill with a dead crater: the
+whole bearing to the cliff that overhangs it somewhat the same relation
+as a bracket to a wall. With this hint you will now be able to pick out
+the leper station on a map; you will be able to judge how much of Molokai
+is thus cut off between the surf and precipice, whether less than a half,
+or less than a quarter, or a fifth, or a tenth--or, say a twentieth; and
+the next time you burst into print you will be in a position to share
+with us the issue of your calculations.
+
+I imagine you to be one of those persons who talk with cheerfulness of
+that place which oxen and wain-ropes could not drag you to behold. You,
+who do not even know its situation on the map, probably denounce
+sensational descriptions, stretching your limbs the while in your
+pleasant parlour on Beretania Street. When I was pulled ashore there one
+early morning, there sat with me in the boat two sisters, bidding
+farewell (in humble imitation of Damien) to the lights and joys of human
+life. One of these wept silently; I could not withhold myself from
+joining her. Had you been there, it is my belief that nature would have
+triumphed even in you; and as the boat drew but a little nearer, and you
+beheld the stairs crowded with abominable deformations of our common
+manhood, and saw yourself landing in the midst of such a population as
+only now and then surrounds us in the horror of a nightmare--what a
+haggard eye you would have rolled over your reluctant shoulder towards
+the house on Beretania Street! Had you gone on; had you found every
+fourth face a blot upon the landscape; had you visited the hospital and
+seen the butt-ends of human beings lying there almost unrecognisable, but
+still breathing, still thinking, still remembering; you would have
+understood that life in the lazaretto is an ordeal from which the nerves
+of a man's spirit shrink, even as his eye quails under the brightness of
+the sun; you would have felt it was (even today) a pitiful place to visit
+and a hell to dwell in. It is not the fear of possible infection. That
+seems a little thing when compared with the pain, the pity, and the
+disgust of the visitor's surroundings, and the atmosphere of affliction,
+disease, and physical disgrace in which he breathes. I do not think I am
+a man more than usually timid; but I never recall the days and nights I
+spent upon that island promontory (eight days and seven nights), without
+heartfelt thankfulness that I am somewhere else. I find in my diary that
+I speak of my stay as a "grinding experience": I have once jotted in the
+margin, "_Harrowing_ is the word"; and when the _Mokolii_ bore me at last
+towards the outer world, I kept repeating to myself, with a new
+conception of their pregnancy, those simple words of the song--
+
+ "'Tis the most distressful country that ever yet was seen."
+
+And observe: that which I saw and suffered from was a settlement purged,
+bettered, beautified; the new village built, the hospital and the Bishop-
+Home excellently arranged; the sisters, the doctor, and the missionaries,
+all indefatigable in their noble tasks. It was a different place when
+Damien came there and made this great renunciation, and slept that first
+night under a tree amidst his rotting brethren: alone with pestilence;
+and looking forward (with what courage, with what pitiful sinkings of
+dread, God only knows) to a lifetime of dressing sores and stumps.
+
+You will say, perhaps, I am too sensitive, that sights as painful abound
+in cancer hospitals and are confronted daily by doctors and nurses. I
+have long learned to admire and envy the doctors and the nurses. But
+there is no cancer hospital so large and populous as Kalawao and
+Kalaupapa; and in such a matter every fresh case, like every inch of
+length in the pipe of an organ, deepens the note of the impression; for
+what daunts the onlooker is that monstrous sum of human suffering by
+which he stands surrounded. Lastly, no doctor or nurse is called upon to
+enter once for all the doors of that gehenna; they do not say farewell,
+they need not abandon hope, on its sad threshold; they but go for a time
+to their high calling, and can look forward as they go to relief, to
+recreation, and to rest. But Damien shut-to with his own hand the doors
+of his own sepulchre.
+
+I shall now extract three passages from my diary at Kalawao.
+
+_A_. "Damien is dead and already somewhat ungratefully remembered in the
+field of his labours and sufferings. 'He was a good man, but very
+officious,' says one. Another tells me he had fallen (as other priests
+so easily do) into something of the ways and habits of thought of a
+Kanaka; but he had the wit to recognise the fact, and the good sense to
+laugh at" [over] "it. A plain man it seems he was; I cannot find he was
+a popular."
+
+_B_. "After Ragsdale's death" [Ragsdale was a famous Luna, or overseer,
+of the unruly settlement] "there followed a brief term of office by
+Father Damien which served only to publish the weakness of that noble
+man. He was rough in his ways, and he had no control. Authority was
+relaxed; Damien's life was threatened, and he was soon eager to resign."
+
+_C_. "Of Damien I begin to have an idea. He seems to have been a man of
+the peasant class, certainly of the peasant type: shrewd, ignorant and
+bigoted, yet with an open mind, and capable of receiving and digesting a
+reproof if it were bluntly administered; superbly generous in the least
+thing as well as in the greatest, and as ready to give his last shirt
+(although not without human grumbling) as he had been to sacrifice his
+life; essentially indiscreet and officious, which made him a troublesome
+colleague; domineering in all his ways, which made him incurably
+unpopular with the Kanakas, but yet destitute of real authority, so that
+his boys laughed at him and he must carry out his wishes by the means of
+bribes. He learned to have a mania for doctoring; and set up the Kanakas
+against the remedies of his regular rivals: perhaps (if anything matter
+at all in the treatment of such a disease) the worst thing that he did,
+and certainly the easiest. The best and worst of the man appear very
+plainly in his dealings with Mr. Chapman's money; he had originally laid
+it out" [intended to lay it out] "entirely for the benefit of Catholics,
+and even so not wisely; but after a long, plain talk, he admitted his
+error fully and revised the list. The sad state of the boys' home is in
+part the result of his lack of control; in part, of his own slovenly ways
+and false ideas of hygiene. Brother officials used to call it 'Damien's
+Chinatown.' 'Well,' they would say, 'your Chinatown keeps growing.' And
+he would laugh with perfect good-nature, and adhere to his errors with
+perfect obstinacy. So much I have gathered of truth about this plain,
+noble human brother and father of ours; his imperfections are the traits
+of his face, by which we know him for our fellow; his martyrdom and his
+example nothing can lessen or annul; and only a person here on the spot
+can properly appreciate their greatness."
+
+I have set down these private passages, as you perceive, without
+correction; thanks to you, the public has them in their bluntness. They
+are almost a list of the man's faults, for it is rather these that I was
+seeking: with his virtues, with the heroic profile of his life, I and the
+world were already sufficiently acquainted. I was besides a little
+suspicious of Catholic testimony; in no ill sense, but merely because
+Damien's admirers and disciples were the least likely to be critical. I
+know you will be more suspicious still; and the facts set down above were
+one and all collected from the lips of Protestants who had opposed the
+father in his life. Yet I am strangely deceived, or they build up the
+image of a man, with all his weakness, essentially heroic, and alive with
+rugged honesty, generosity, and mirth.
+
+Take it for what it is, rough private jottings of the worst sides of
+Damien's character, collected from the lips of those who had laboured
+with and (in your own phrase) "knew the man";--though I question whether
+Damien would have said that he knew you. Take it, and observe with
+wonder how well you were served by your gossips, how ill by your
+intelligence and sympathy; in how many points of fact we are at one, and
+how widely our appreciations vary. There is something wrong here; either
+with you or me. It is possible, for instance, that you, who seem to have
+so many ears in Kalawao, had heard of the affair of Mr. Chapman's money,
+and were singly struck by Damien's intended wrong-doing. I was struck
+with that also, and set it fairly down; but I was struck much more by the
+fact that he had the honesty of mind to be convinced. I may here tell
+you that it was a long business; that one of his colleagues sat with him
+late into the night, multiplying arguments and accusations; that the
+father listened as usual with "perfect good-nature and perfect
+obstinacy"; but at the last, when he was persuaded--"Yes," said he, "I am
+very much obliged to you; you have done me a service; it would have been
+a theft." There are many (not Catholics merely) who require their heroes
+and saints to be infallible; to these the story will be painful; not to
+the true lovers, patrons, and servants of mankind.
+
+And I take it, this is a type of our division; that you are one of those
+who have an eye for faults and failures; that you take a pleasure to find
+and publish them; and that, having found them, you make haste to forget
+the overvailing virtues and the real success which had alone introduced
+them to your knowledge. It is a dangerous frame of mind. That you may
+understand how dangerous, and into what a situation it has already
+brought you, we will (if you please) go hand-in-hand through the
+different phrases of your letter, and candidly examine each from the
+point of view of its truth, its appositeness, and its charity.
+
+ Damien was _coarse_.
+
+It is very possible. You make us sorry for the lepers, who had only a
+coarse old peasant for their friend and father. But you, who were so
+refined, why were you not there, to cheer them with the lights of
+culture? Or may I remind you that we have some reason to doubt if John
+the Baptist were genteel; and in the case of Peter, on whose career your
+doubtless dwell approvingly in the pulpit, no doubt at all he was a
+"coarse, headstrong" fisherman! Yet even in our Protestant Bibles Peter
+is called Saint.
+
+ Damien was _dirty_.
+
+He was. Think of the poor lepers annoyed with this dirty comrade! But
+the clean Dr. Hyde was at his food in a fine house.
+
+ Damien was _headstrong_.
+
+I believe you are right again; and I thank God for his strong head and
+heart.
+
+ Damien was _bigoted_.
+
+I am not fond of bigots myself, because they are not fond of me. But
+what is meant by bigotry, that we should regard it as a blemish in a
+priest? Damien believed his own religion with the simplicity of a
+peasant or a child; as I would I could suppose that you do. For this, I
+wonder at him some way off; and had that been his only character, should
+have avoided him in life. But the point of interest in Damien, which has
+caused him to be so much talked about and made him at last the subject of
+your pen and mine, was that, in him, his bigotry, his intense and narrow
+faith, wrought potently for good, and strengthened him to be one of the
+world's heroes and exemplars.
+
+ Damien _was not sent to Molokai_, _but went there without orders_.
+
+Is this a misreading? or do you really mean the words for blame? I have
+heard Christ, in the pulpits of our Church, held up for imitation on the
+ground that His sacrifice was voluntary. Does Dr. Hyde think otherwise?
+
+ Damien _did not stay at the settlement_, _etc._
+
+It is true he was allowed many indulgences. Am I to understand that you
+blame the father for profiting by these, or the officers for granting
+them? In either case, it is a mighty Spartan standard to issue from the
+house on Beretania Street; and I am convinced you will find yourself with
+few supporters.
+
+ Damien _had no hand in the reforms_, _etc._
+
+I think even you will admit that I have already been frank in my
+description of the man I am defending; but before I take you up upon this
+head, I will be franker still, and tell you that perhaps nowhere in the
+world can a man taste a more pleasurable sense of contrast than when he
+passes from Damien's "Chinatown" at Kalawao to the beautiful Bishop-Home
+at Kalaupapa. At this point, in my desire to make all fair for you, I
+will break my rule and adduce Catholic testimony. Here is a passage from
+my diary about my visit to the Chinatown, from which you will see how it
+is (even now) regarded by its own officials: "We went round all the
+dormitories, refectories, etc.--dark and dingy enough, with a superficial
+cleanliness, which he" [Mr. Dutton, the lay-brother] "did not seek to
+defend. 'It is almost decent,' said he; 'the sisters will make that all
+right when we get them here.'" And yet I gathered it was already better
+since Damien was dead, and far better than when he was there alone and
+had his own (not always excellent) way. I have now come far enough to
+meet you on a common ground of fact; and I tell you that, to a mind not
+prejudiced by jealousy, all the reforms of the lazaretto, and even those
+which he most vigorously opposed, are properly the work of Damien. They
+are the evidence of his success; they are what his heroism provoked from
+the reluctant and the careless. Many were before him in the field; Mr.
+Meyer, for instance, of whose faithful work we hear too little: there
+have been many since; and some had more worldly wisdom, though none had
+more devotion, than our saint. Before his day, even you will confess,
+they had effected little. It was his part, by one striking act of
+martyrdom, to direct all men's eyes on that distressful country. At a
+blow, and with the price of his life, he made the place illustrious and
+public. And that, if you will consider largely, was the one reform
+needful; pregnant of all that should succeed. It brought money; it
+brought (best individual addition of them all) the sisters; it brought
+supervision, for public opinion and public interest landed with the man
+at Kalawao. If ever any man brought reforms, and died to bring them, it
+was he. There is not a clean cup or towel in the Bishop-Home, but dirty
+Damien washed it.
+
+ Damien _was not a pure man in his relations with women_, _etc._
+
+How do you know that? Is this the nature of conversation in that house
+on Beretania Street which the cabman envied, driving past?--racy details
+of the misconduct of the poor peasant priest, toiling under the cliffs of
+Molokai?
+
+Many have visited the station before me; they seem not to have heard the
+rumour. When I was there I heard many shocking tales, for my informants
+were men speaking with the plainness of the laity; and I heard plenty of
+complaints of Damien. Why was this never mentioned? and how came it to
+you in the retirement of your clerical parlour?
+
+But I must not even seem to deceive you. This scandal, when I read it in
+your letter, was not new to me. I had heard it once before; and I must
+tell you how. There came to Samoa a man from Honolulu; he, in a public-
+house on the beach, volunteered the statement that Damien had "contracted
+the disease from having connection with the female lepers"; and I find a
+joy in telling you how the report was welcomed in a public-house. A man
+sprang to his feet; I am not at liberty to give his name, but from what I
+heard I doubt if you would care to have him to dinner in Beretania
+Street. "You miserable little -------" (here is a word I dare not print,
+it would so shock your ears). "You miserable little ------," he cried,
+"if the story were a thousand times true, can't you see you are a million
+times a lower ----- for daring to repeat it?" I wish it could be told of
+you that when the report reached you in your house, perhaps after family
+worship, you had found in your soul enough holy anger to receive it with
+the same expressions; ay, even with that one which I dare not print; it
+would not need to have been blotted away, like Uncle Toby's oath, by the
+tears of the recording angel; it would have been counted to you for your
+brightest righteousness. But you have deliberately chosen the part of
+the man from Honolulu, and you have played it with improvements of your
+own. The man from Honolulu--miserable, leering creature--communicated
+the tale to a rude knot of beach-combing drinkers in a public-house,
+where (I will so far agree with your temperance opinions) man is not
+always at his noblest; and the man from Honolulu had himself been
+drinking--drinking, we may charitably fancy, to excess. It was to your
+"Dear Brother, the Reverend H. B. Gage," that you chose to communicate
+the sickening story; and the blue ribbon which adorns your portly bosom
+forbids me to allow you the extenuating plea that you were drunk when it
+was done. Your "dear brother"--a brother indeed--made haste to deliver
+up your letter (as a means of grace, perhaps) to the religious papers;
+where, after many months, I found and read and wondered at it; and whence
+I have now reproduced it for the wonder of others. And you and your dear
+brother have, by this cycle of operations, built up a contrast very
+edifying to examine in detail. The man whom you would not care to have
+to dinner, on the one side; on the other, the Reverend Dr. Hyde and the
+Reverend H. B. Gage: the Apia bar-room, the Honolulu manse.
+
+But I fear you scarce appreciate how you appear to your fellow-men; and
+to bring it home to you, I will suppose your story to be true. I will
+suppose--and God forgive me for supposing it--that Damien faltered and
+stumbled in his narrow path of duty; I will suppose that, in the horror
+of his isolation, perhaps in the fever of incipient disease, he, who was
+doing so much more than he had sworn, failed in the letter of his
+priestly oath--he, who was so much a better man than either you or me,
+who did what we have never dreamed of daring--he too tasted of our common
+frailty. "O, Iago, the pity of it!" The least tender should be moved to
+tears; the most incredulous to prayer. And all that you could do was to
+pen your letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage!
+
+Is it growing at all clear to you what a picture you have drawn of your
+own heart? I will try yet once again to make it clearer. You had a
+father: suppose this tale were about him, and some informant brought it
+to you, proof in hand: I am not making too high an estimate of your
+emotional nature when I suppose you would regret the circumstance? that
+you would feel the tale of frailty the more keenly since it shamed the
+author of your days? and that the last thing you would do would be to
+publish it in the religious press? Well, the man who tried to do what
+Damien did, is my father, and the father of the man in the Apia bar, and
+the father of all who love goodness; and he was your father too, if God
+had given you grace to see it.
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+
+{1} From the Sydney _Presbyterian_, October 26, 1889.
+
+
+
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